Abstract

A 32-year-old active cyclist was referred fo r the evaluation because of syncope he had performed in preseason. He was found to be normostenic, acyanotic, normotensive with clear lungs and a regular pulse of 60 bp m, with normal dual heart sounds and a grade Levine 2/6 continuous diastolic murmu r in the second intercostal space of the left parasternal area. He had no family history of premature card iac death and his lipids were normal. Rest ECG showed a regular sinus rhythm of 62 bp m with inco mplete right bundle branch block and no significant ST-T changes. A transthoracic ECHO in parasternal short-axis view revealed an anomalous colour flow jet in diastole arising fro m the lateral wall into the main pulmonary artery and coronary artery fistula with non-significant left -to-right shunt (Qp/Qs ratio 1.2).came under suspicion. In contrast, it has not been confirmed clearly by the transoesophageal ECHO. Coronary angiography was without coronary stenosis and confirmed a 'serpentine' anomalous drainage supposedly from left anterior descending artery to the main pulmonary artery. A complex anato my of sacculary dilated fistula that originates fro m the pro ximal left anterio r descending artery and drainages the main pulmonary artery was showed in detail by a 64 slice MDCT scanning. Myocardial Tc-99m Myoview perfusion SPECT imag ing showed no perfusion defects in maximal physical stress and follo w-up without intervention was suggested. In addition, due to the results of holter ECG monitoring, head-up tilt testing, carotid sinus massage and programmed atrial stimulat ion syncope was concluded as vasovagal, but its nature still remains discussible. After a three year follow-up patient remains asympto matic and recently performed control myocardial perfusion SPECT showed no signs of stress related myo cardial ischemia. In conclusion, several imaging techniques are needed for an accurate diagnosis of coronary fistula and for the suggestion of proper further management. In some cases syncope may be the first man ifestation of CAF, but it is still unclear if it is directly related to the coronary anomaly.

Highlights

  • Congenital coronary artery fistula (CAF), first described by Krause in 1865 is characterized by normal aort ic orig in of the coronary artery but with a fistulous communication with the great vessels as well as all cardiac chambers

  • Kisko et al.: An Unusual Presentation of Coronary Artery Fistula in Athlete - Case Report fistulas, follo wed by the right coronary artery (31%), the circu mflex (20%) and the left main trunk (7%)[2]

  • We report the case of coronary to main pulmonary artery fistula in act ive athlete first presented with syncope

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Congenital coronary artery fistula (CAF), first described by Krause in 1865 is characterized by normal aort ic orig in of the coronary artery but with a fistulous communication with the great vessels as well as all cardiac chambers. According to the global experience the current characteristics of congenital coronary fistulas in adults had changed in the last decade It was reported in 2006 that the origin of the fistulas was fro m the left coronary artery in 58% and fro m the right in 42% of patients and in the recently published review the overall figures were 69% and 31%, respectively. Kisko et al.: An Unusual Presentation of Coronary Artery Fistula in Athlete - Case Report fistulas, follo wed by the right coronary artery (31%), the circu mflex (20%) and the left main trunk (7%)[2]. We report the case of coronary to main pulmonary artery fistula in act ive athlete first presented with syncope. A transt horacic echocardiography in parast ernal short -axis view reveals an anomalous colour flowjet at colour Doppler analysis arising from the lateral wall into the main pulmonary artery

Case Presentation
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call